Film Review
Dans l'eau qui fait des bulles
(also known as
Le
Garde-champêtre mène l'enquête) is one of the
weirder whodunits you are ever likely to watch, one in which the murder
victim provides a voiceover narration from beyond the grave, à
la
Sunset Boulevard.
Although a plot résumé may make it sound like an
egregious rip-off of Hitchcock's
The Trouble with Harry (1955),
the film is actually based on a novel, Marcel G. Prêtre's
La Chair à poissons, and is
a quintessentially French black comedy - a fairly amusing one at that.
The film was directed by Maurice Delbez, who had previously had a box
office smash with another lively comedy -
À pied, à cheval et en voiture (1957).
A pretty routine murder mystery is livened up no end by a pleasing river of jet black humour which
washes away everything in its path, except of course the corpse which
stubbornly refuses to stay put. Louis de Funès (still some
years away from that elusive stardom) and Jacques Dufilho are the only two
actors to standout in a fairly nondescript
ensemble, which includes the inexplicably popular Philippe Lemaire.
De Funès' lunatic presence (offering a tantalising foretaste of what
is to come in his subsequent film comedies)
alone is enough to make the film well
worth watching.
Dans l'eau qui fait des bulles is
an enjoyably daft variation on a familiar
theme, with enough devious twists and turns to keep any Agatha Christie
addict hooked and enough mischievous graveyard humour to stop the rest of us from
falling asleep.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Businessman Paul Ernzer is happily indulging in his favourite pastime, fishing on a Swiss
lake, when he lands a catch of the most surprising kind - the dead body of the recently
deceased Jean-Louis Preminger. It so happens that Ernzer has good
reason for wanting Preminger dead - he owed him some money. Fearing
he may be mistaken for the killer, the industrialist hastily throws the corpse back into the lake.
The cadaver is washed ashore and is found by the victim's wife Arlette
and her lover Charles. Each thinking the other killed Preminger,
these two quickly make up their minds to conceal the body. As the troublesome
corpse continues to resurface, haunting everyone who had a reason to
murder Preminger, Commissaire Guillaume begins his criminal investigation...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.